1,199 research outputs found

    Myocardial expression of a constitutively active alpha 1B-adrenergic receptor in transgenic mice induces cardiac hypertrophy.

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    Transgenic mice were generated by using the alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter coupled to the coding sequence of a constitutively active mutant alpha 1B-adrenergic receptor (AR). These transgenic animals demonstrated cardiac-specific expression of this alpha 1-AR with resultant activation of phospholipase C as shown by increased myocardial diacylglycerol content. A phenotype consistent with cardiac hypertrophy developed in adult transgenic mice with increased heart/body weight ratios, myocyte cross-sectional areas, and ventricular atrial natriuretic factor mRNA levels relative to nontransgenic controls. These transgenic animals may provide insight into the biochemical triggers that induce hypertrophy in cardiac disease and serve as a convenient experimental model for studies of this condition

    Validity of the Supramaximal Test to Verify Maximal Oxygen Uptake in Children and Adolescents

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Human Kinetics via the DOI in this record.Purpose: This study had 2 objectives: (1) to examine whether the validity of the supramaximal verification test for maximal oxygen uptake ( formula presented ) differs in children and adolescents when stratified for sex, body mass, and cardiorespiratory fitness and (2) to assess sensitivity and specificity of primary and secondary objective criteria from the incremental test to verify formula presented . Methods: In total, 128 children and adolescents (76 male and 52 females; age: 9.3-17.4 y) performed a ramp-incremental test to exhaustion on a cycle ergometer followed by a supramaximal test to verify formula presented . Results: Supramaximal tests verified formula presented in 88% of participants. Group incremental test peak formula presented was greater than the supramaximal test (2.27 [0.65] L·min-1 and 2.17 [0.63] L·min-1; P  .18). Supramaximal test time to exhaustion predicted supramaximal test formula presented verification (P = .04). Primary and secondary objective criteria had insufficient sensitivity (7.1%-24.1%) and specificity (50%-100%) to verify formula presented . Conclusion: The utility of supramaximal testing to verify formula presented is not affected by sex, body mass, or cardiorespiratory fitness status. Supramaximal testing should replace secondary objective criteria to verify formula presented

    Agreement between left and right middle cerebral artery blood velocity responses to incremental and constant work-rate exercise in healthy males and females

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IOP Publishing via the DOI in this recordObjective: To quantify the agreement between left and right middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCAv) responses to incremental and constant work-rate exercise in adults. Approach: Seventeen healthy adults (23.8±2.4 years, 9 females) completed a ramp incremental test to exhaustion on a cycle ergometer, three 6-minute transitions at a moderate-intensity, and three at a heavy-intensity, all on separate days. Bilateral MCAv was measured throughout using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, with left and right MCAv data analysed separately. Data were analysed at baseline, gas exchange threshold, respiratory compensation point and exhaustion during ramp incremental exercise. MCAv responses to constant work-rate exercise were analysed using a mono-exponential model, to determine time- and amplitude-based kinetic response parameters. Main Results: Left and right MCAv responses to incremental and constant work-rate exercise were significantly, strongly and positively correlated (r≄0.61, P<0.01). Coefficient of variation (left vs right) ranged from 7.3-20.7%, 6.4-26.2% and 5.9-22.5% for ramp, moderate and heavy 33 intensity exercise, respectively. The relative change in MCAv from baseline was higher in the right compared to left MCAv during ramp, moderate and heavy-intensity exercise (all P<0.05), but the effect sizes were small (d≀0.4). Small mean left-right differences were present during ramp incremental exercise at all time-points (<6 cm/s; <4%), and for all kinetic parameters during moderate and heavy-intensity exercise (<3 cm/s, <3%, <4 s). Significance: These findings demonstrate similarities between left and right MCAv responses to incremental and constant-work rate exercise in adults on a group-level, but also highlight individual variation in the agreement between left and right MCAv exercise responsesQUEX Institut

    A filament of dark matter between two clusters of galaxies

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    It is a firm prediction of the concordance Cold Dark Matter (CDM) cosmological model that galaxy clusters live at the intersection of large-scale structure filaments. The thread-like structure of this "cosmic web" has been traced by galaxy redshift surveys for decades. More recently the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM) residing in low redshift filaments has been observed in emission and absorption. However, a reliable direct detection of the underlying Dark Matter skeleton, which should contain more than half of all matter, remained elusive, as earlier candidates for such detections were either falsified or suffered from low signal-to-noise ratios and unphysical misalignements of dark and luminous matter. Here we report the detection of a dark matter filament connecting the two main components of the Abell 222/223 supercluster system from its weak gravitational lensing signal, both in a non-parametric mass reconstruction and in parametric model fits. This filament is coincident with an overdensity of galaxies and diffuse, soft X-ray emission and contributes mass comparable to that of an additional galaxy cluster to the total mass of the supercluster. Combined with X-ray observations, we place an upper limit of 0.09 on the hot gas fraction, the mass of X-ray emitting gas divided by the total mass, in the filament.Comment: Nature, in pres

    The reliability of a breath‐hold protocol to determine cerebrovascular reactivity in adolescents

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    This is the published version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordPurpose Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) is impaired in adolescents with cardiovascular disease risk factors. A breath‐hold test is a noninvasive method of assessing CVR, yet there are no reliability data of this outcome in youth. This study aimed to assess the reliability of a breath‐hold protocol to measure CVR in adolescents. Methods Twenty‐one 13 to 15 year old adolescents visited the laboratory on two separate occasions, to assess the within‐test, within‐day and between‐day reliability of a breath‐hold protocol, consisting of three breath‐hold attempts. CVR was defined as the relative increase from baseline in middle cerebral artery mean blood velocity following a maximal breath‐hold of up to 30 seconds, quantified via transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. Results Mean breath‐hold duration and CVR were never significantly correlated (r  .08). The within‐test coefficient of variation for CVR was 15.2%, with no significant differences across breath‐holds (P = .88), so the three breath‐hold attempts were averaged for subsequent analyses. The within‐ and between‐day coefficients of variation for CVR were 10.8% and 15.3%, respectively. Conclusions CVR assessed via a three breath‐hold protocol can be reliably measured in adolescents, yielding similar within‐ and between‐day reliability. Analyses revealed that breath‐hold length and CVR were unrelated, indicating the commonly reported normalization of CVR to breath‐hold duration (breath‐hold index) may be unnecessary in youth

    Best Unbiased Estimates for the Microwave Background Anisotropies

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    It is likely that the observed distribution of the microwave background temperature over the sky is only one realization of the underlying random process associated with cosmological perturbations of quantum-mechanical origin. If so, one needs to derive the parameters of the random process, as accurately as possible, from the data of a single map. These parameters are of the utmost importance, since our knowledge of them would help us to reconstruct the dynamical evolution of the very early Universe. It appears that the lack of ergodicity of a random process on a 2-sphere does not allow us to do this with arbitrarily high accuracy. We are left with the problem of finding the best unbiased estimators of the participating parameters. A detailed solution to this problem is presented in this article. The theoretical error bars for the best unbiased estimates are derived and discussed.Comment: 26 pages, revtex; minor modifications, 8 new references, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    The acute and postprandial effects of sugar moiety on vascular and metabolic health outcomes in adolescents

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Canadian Science Publishing via the DOI in this recordThis study explored the cardiometabolic responses to sugar moieties acutely, and following a subsequent mixed meal tolerance test (MMTT). Twenty-one healthy adolescents (N=10 female, 14.3±0.4 years) completed three experimental and one control condition, in a counterbalanced order. These consisted of different drinks to compare the effect of 300 mL of water (control), or 300 mL of water mixed with 60 g of glucose, fructose or sucrose, on vascular function (flow-mediated dilation; FMD, microvascular reactivity (total hyperaemic response; TRH); and cerebrovascular reactivity; CVR), and blood samples for [uric acid], [glucose], [triglycerides] and [lactate]. FMD increased 1 hour after glucose and sucrose (P<0.001, ES≄0.92) but was unchanged following fructose and water (P>0.19, ES>0.09). CVR and TRH were unchanged 1 hour following all conditions (P>0.57, ES>0.02). Following the MMTT, FMD was impaired in all conditions (P0.40) with no differences between conditions (P>0.13, ES<0.39). Microvascular TRH was increased in all conditions (P=0.001, ES=0.88), and CVR was preserved in all conditions post MMTT (P=0.87, ES=0.02). Blood [uric acid] was elevated following fructose consumption and the MMTT (P0.40). Consumption of a sugar sweetened beverage did not result in vascular dysfunction in healthy adolescents, however the vascular and metabolic responses were dependent on sugar moiety

    Cosmological parameters from the clustering of AGN

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    We attempt to put constraints on different cosmological and biasing models by combining the recent clustering results of X-ray sources in the local (z≀0.1z\le 0.1) and distant universe (z∌1z\sim 1).Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the ''2nd Hellenic Cosmology Workshop'', Athens 2001, eds, Manolis Plionis & Spiros Kotsaki
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